6.2 HP IBRIX 9000 Storage Network Best Practices Guide (TA768-96069, December 2012)

In addition to the Linux bond trunking implemented primarily for fault-protection, some IBRIX 9000
components also support the lower level LACP trunking mechanism to increase the maximum
bandwidth available to a network connection.
In 9720/9730 systems, LACP support is enabled in the Virtual Connect modules to allow an
increase of the maximum bandwidth available between the c7000 enclosure and the customer
network.
In X93xx systems, each individual server can be configured to support LACP across its physical
interfaces by grouping the physical interfaces into a Linux bond running in mode 4.
To use LACP trunking, both ends of the wired connection must support the LACP protocol. The
customer must ensure that the customer end of the connection between the IBRIX 9000 platform
and the customer network is set up to support the LACP protocol.
Protocol usage
Table 3 lists the common protocols used by the IBRIX solution. This table provides a reminder of
the types of protocols that must be allowed to pass through the customer networking infrastructure
for the IBRIX platform to function correctly. The table is not complete and is insufficient for setting
up a firewall. For a more definitive list of protocols and ports that is adequate for firewall setup,
see the HP IBRIX administrator guide for your system.
Table 3 IBRIX protocol usage
ProtocolsLayer
EthernetPhysical
IP, ICMP, UDP, UDP-multicast, TCP, IGMPTCP/IP layer
HTTP, SSH, SSL, SNMP, NFS, SMB, NDMP, IBRIX Client Protocols, FTP, NTP, RPC, IPP, ICAP,
Dataprotector
Application
Protocol usage 25